I’ve never had trouble accepting T.S. Eliot’s announcement in his 1929 essay “Dante” that “genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood.” I can rattle off poems I’ve read and loved for decades that I still don’t thoroughly understand. Take Allen Tate’s 1934 sonnet beginning “Ah, Christ, I love you rings to the wild sky.” Or Edgar Bowers’ “Dark Earth and Summer” from his first collection, The Form of Loss (1956). I’ve often pondered those lines from the final stanza: “What you are will outlast / The warm variety of risk.” Of course, a poem that can be thoroughly paraphrased in prose is probably not much of a poem.
It might be argued that Tate and Bowers are difficult poets, whose language and syntax are often knotty. But what about a poet no one would confuse with the high priests of modernism? Take Walter de la Mare, often dismissively pigeonholed as a poet for kids. Here’s a poem of his I have been trying to commit to memory:
“So
true and sweet his music rings,
So radiant
is his mind with light
The very
intent and meaning of what he sings
May stay half-hidden from
sight.
“His
flowers, waters, children, birds
Lovely as
their own archetypes are shown;
Nothing is here uncommon, things or words,
Yet every one’s his own.”
The poem is
“Henry Vaughan” from Inward Companion
(1950). As always with de la Mare, clarity is no issue. The third and fourth
lines even restate my argument above. I first encountered Vaughan (1621-1695)
in high school while reading the first of Alfred Kazin’s memoirs, A Walker in the City (1951). Kazin is a
blowhard, the spiritual opposite of the writers he claims to celebrate, but he
did introduce me to Vaughan’s “The World,” which begins with a line that
remains for me the definitive literary expression of wonder: “I saw Eternity
the other night.”
Mystics lose
us with their inarticulate gush. Their experiences defy articulation so they sometimes
resort to yawping, the verbal counterpart of the early Shakers writhing on the
floor. In contrast, Vaughan might be recounting last night’s visit to the
bowling alley. His manner is matter-of-fact, methodical, almost journalistic.
He does this with impressive regularity, especially in his opening lines, as in
“They are all gone into the world of light!” and “I Walk’d the Other Day.” The
effect recalls a gifted storyteller who hooks us with his first words. To be
convincing and memorable, wonder must be made to sound familiar, even mundane.
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